P1121
Circuit Description
The Throttle Position (TP) sensor is a potentiometer. The Control Module (PCM/VCM) supplies the TP sensor a reference voltage, signal, and ground circuits. When the throttle is depressed, the TP sensor signal rises to near the reference voltage. When the throttle is released, the TP sensor signal decreases from the reference voltage. The Control Module monitors the TP sensor signal circuit voltage to determine the throttle blade's angle (or opening). This DTC is designed to detect intermittent high signal voltage on the TP sensor signal circuit.
Conditions for Running The DTC
The engine is running
Conditions for Setting The DTC
The TP sensor voltage is more than 4.7 volts for less than 1 second
Action Taken When the DTC Sets
^ The Control Module stores the DTC in history after the first failure but will not illuminate the Malfunction Indicator Lamp (MIL).
^ The Control Module records the operating conditions at the time the diagnostic fails. The Control Module stores the failure information in the scan tools Freeze Frame and/or the Failure Records.
Conditions for Clearing the MIL/DTC
^ A history DTC will clear if no fault conditions have been detected for 40 warm-up cycles.
^ A warm-up cycle occurs when the coolant temperature has risen 22°C (40°F) from the start-up coolant temperature and the Engine Coolant Temperature exceeds 70°C (160°F) during the same ignition cycle.
^ Use the scan tool Clear Information function.
Diagnostic Aids
The scan tool reads the throttle position in volts. The scan tool should read between 0.45-0.85 volts with the throttle closed and the ignition switch turned ON or at idle. The voltage should increase at a steady rate as the throttle is moved toward the Wide Open Throttle (WOT) position.
Also, some scan tools will read the throttle angle: 0 percent equals closed throttle; 100 percent equals WOT.
Observe the TP sensor while depressing the accelerator pedal with the ignition turned ON leaving the engine OFF. The display should vary from about 0.5 volts (500 mV) with the throttle closed to more than 4.5 volts (4500 mV) when the throttle is held at the WOT position.
This DTC could set if the TP sensor ground circuit is intermittently open or the TP sensor signal circuit is intermittently shorted to voltage. If a high voltage reading is present, additional sensor circuit voltage codes could be set. Refer to any non-intermittent DTCs that are set.
An intermittent may be caused by any of the following conditions:
^ A poor connection
^ Rubbed through wire insulation
^ A broken wire inside the insulation
Thoroughly check any circuitry that is suspected of causing the intermittent complaint. Refer to Intermittents and Poor Connections Diagnosis. Symptom Related Diagnostic Procedures
Test Description
The numbers below refer to the step numbers in the diagnostic table.
2. If the TP sensor voltage is more than 4.7 volts, then the condition is present. Even though DTC P0123 did not set, this DTC is more comprehensive and may aid in diagnosis.